SBA Spokesman Terry Sutherland, Lloyd Chapman, Miscoding and Other Myths

Press Release

SBA Spokesman Terry Sutherland, Lloyd Chapman, Miscoding and Other Myths

October 10, 2013

I think I have figured out the real reason that not one journalist in America has written a single story on President Obama's intention to resurrect Ronald Reagan's plan to close the Small Business Administration (SBA) by combining it with the Department of Commerce.

It was big news when Ronald Reagan tried it 1985. Why not now?

You can't write about President Obama's plan to close the SBA because you would have to mention me. I am the only person in America that is objecting to Obama's plan to close the SBA and it seems it's just not possible to write about my exploits as a small business advocate.

As I have told the last 10 journalists that have interviewed me, whose stories never ran, you are not allowed to write an accurate story about Lloyd Chapman. The Feds simply won't allow it and they have hired some of the biggest names in the PR business, like APCO Worldwide to make sure of that.

The federal government is absolutely terrified of me. I think the government's fear of me intensified in 2005 when Entrepreneur magazine compared me to a "modern day Cesar Chavez."

The thought of a "modern day Cesar Chavez" organizing all 28 million small businesses must have been an absolutely terrifying proposition to the federal government. They probably had nightmares about 28 million small businesses marching on Washington and forcing them to stop cheating small businesses.

They had already learned I was a force to be reckoned with as a result of my series of legal victories in federal court. I had won a string of Freedom of Information Act cases that forced the Feds to release thousands of pages of very damaging data. The data proved the Pentagon and just about every other federal agency had fraudulently claimed to be achieving the Congressionally-mandated 23 percent small business contracting goal by including billions of dollars in contracts to hundreds of the largest corporations in the world.

They were so desperate to cover up the embarrassing and potentially incriminating data that government attorneys for the SBA blatantly lied to the court and claimed the SBA had no knowledge or information on the actual recipients of federal small business contracts. 

Judge Marilyn Patel ruled in my favor and forced the government to release the names of thousands of Fortune 500 firms and large businesses from around the world. In her ruling she stated, "The court finds curious the SBA's argument that it does not 'control' the very information it needs to carry out its duties and functions."

I had that statement printed on a very large board that I proudly display in my office.

So, if you think I'm a conspiracy nut like the federal government would have you believe, try and report on my legislation, media appearances, legal victories and my campaign to stop the closure of the SBA. Make one phone call to Retired Naval Commander Terry Sutherland, former worldwide spokesman for the Pentagon who now currently and surprisingly heads the SBA press office and see what happens.

Let me give you a hint – they'll want to talk to you off the record with a group of nameless individuals on a scheduled conference call, REFUSE. That is their favorite trick to confuse and confound journalists. Tell them you will only talk to one person, Terry Sutherland.

Ask Mr. Sutherland why the SBA told a federal judge they didn't know who received federal small business contracts. Ask him why in the past the SBA claimed it was a "Myth" that large corporations received federal small business contracts.

Ask him about the 30 plus federal lawsuits I have won against a variety of federal agencies.

Ask him about the bill I wrote and had introduced into Congress, H.R. 1622, the "Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act" that would once and for all end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants around the world. Ask him why the SBA isn't backing the bill; they say they want to make sure small business contracts don't go to big business.

Ask him why 235 Fortune 500 firms received federal small business contracts last year.

Ask him about the federal definition of a small business that defines a small business as "independently owned" and how that definition would exclude any publicly-traded firms.

Ask him why every SBA Inspector General for nine consecutive years has named the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants as the number one problem at the SBA and every year it gets worse and worse.

Most importantly, ask him about the miscoding, simple human error, mistakes and anomalies the SBA claims is the reason thousands of the largest companies in the world have received hundreds of billions of dollars in federal small business contracts for over a decade. See if he can explain why these supposed "random anomalies" always report awards to corporate giants as small business awards and never the other way around. Have him explain why, for over a decade, these random errors, miscoding and anomalies always inflate the actual volume and percentage of federal contracts to small businesses while at the same time diverting billions of dollars to Fortune 500 firms.

If you really want to see what a real conspiracy looks like, ask him to explain the difference between Ronald Reagan's plan to permanently close the SBA by combining it with the Department of Commerce and President Obama's plan to "streamline government" by combining the SBA with the Department of Commerce.

Here's the last thing, when you have finished with your conversation with Mr. Sutherland, call me. I will refer you to a court case, a federal statute and one or more federal investigations that will prove everything he told you was a bold-faced lie.

For the latest video from the ASBL, click here.

###

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2013/10/10/5810488/sba-spokesman-terry-sutherland.html#storylink=cpy

No More New Apple Computer or Federal Express if Obama Closes the SBA

Press Release

No More New Apple Computer or Federal Express if Obama Closes the SBA

October 8, 2013

Apple Computer and Federal Express are just two examples of thousands of firms that got their start with the help of the Small Business Administration (SBA).

President Obama has announced his intention to resurrect Ronald Reagan's plan to permanently close the SBA by combining it with the Department of Commerce.

When Ronald Reagan caved into pressure from the nation's largest defense contractors and agreed to try and close the SBA, the mainstream media and Democrats in Congress mounted a formidable opposition. Small business advocates like Senators Carl Levin, James Sasser and Lowell Weicker defeated Reagan's plan to close the SBA and dismantle all federal small business programs.

Journalists like Peter Jennings, Tom Brokaw, Ann Compton and Irving R. Levine all came to the aid of American small businesses.

As a result, during the last 30 years, millions of small businesses were able to get their start, compete for federal contracts, receive loans, flourish and create millions of net new jobs in America.

According to the latest data from the U.S. Census Bureau, small businesses are responsible for over 90 percent of net new jobs in America, over 50 percent of the private sector workforce, over 50 percent of the GDP and over 90 percent of U.S. exporters. A study by the Kauffman Foundation found 100 percent of all net new jobs in America, since 1980, have been created by small businesses.

Reagan was honest and blunt that he wanted to permanently "close the SBA" by combining it with the Department of Commerce. President Obama has learned from Reagan's failed attempt to "close the SBA" so he has renamed his SBA closure plan, "streamlining government" and "combining agencies."

So far, it has been extremely successful in avoiding media attention and not one journalist in America has reported Obama's plan to close the SBA is identical in every way to Ronald Reagan's plan to close the SBA.

Without the political opposition and accurate media coverage Reagan faced, President Obama will likely be successful in closing the SBA and bringing an end to the only agency in American history to assist the 28 million small businesses that create up to 100 percent of the nation's net new jobs.

Without coverage by the mainstream media, by the time most Americans find out the SBA has been shuttered and all federal small business programs are to be dismantled, it will be too late.

If the SBA is closed, millions of future companies like Apple and Federal Express will never exist. Their positive impact on our economy and our society will never be known. The devastating negative impact of the SBA's closure on our nation's economy will be felt for generations.

###

Obama Will Use Shutdown to Permanently Close the Small Business Administration

Press Release

Obama Will Use Shutdown to Permanently Close the Small Business Administration

October 3, 2013

The American Small Business League (ASBL) is predicting President Obama will use the government shutdown as an excuse to permanently shutdown the Small Business Administration (SBA).

Ronald Reagan tried to close the SBA by combing it with the Department of Commerce. Obama has resurrected Reagan's exact same plan to close the SBA by combing it with the Department of Commerce.

In February of 2008, President Obama released the statement "It is time to end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants."

Not only has President Obama refused to keep his campaign promise to the nation's 28 million small businesses, the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants has jumped significantly during the Obama Administration.

Every year of the Obama administration, the SBA Inspector General has named the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants as the most significant problem at the SBA.

In July, the SBA claimed $89.9 billion in federal contracts were awarded to small businesses last year. Using the Freedom of Information Act, the ASBL obtained the names of all the firms the SBA had included in those statistics. The data revealed that the SBA had included contracts to 235 Fortune 500 firms in their $89.9 billion number.

In an investigative report by CBS, the SBA claimed 235 Fortune 500 firms had received billions in federal small business contracts accidentally through, "simple human error." They were unable to explain why the alleged errors always diverted small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms.

The Government Accountability Office investigated an SBA-managed small business program and released Report 10-108 which essentially accused SBA executives of encouraging fraud. The report stated, "By failing to hold firms accountable, SBA and contracting agencies have sent a message to the contracting community that there is no punishment or consequences for committing fraud."

In November of 2008, ASBL President Lloyd Chapman predicted President Obama would close the SBA in the very same manner Ronald Reagan proposed, which was by combining the SBA with the Department of Commerce.

President Obama announced his plans to do exactly that in January of 2012.

A series of federal investigations and investigative reports have all uncovered widespread fraud at the SBA.

The ASBL believes President Obama's true motivation for closing the SBA is to obscure the rampant fraud that has gone on at the agency during his administration.

President Obama's rational behind closing the SBA to save $300 million a year seems disingenuous and illogical since the SBA budget is a mere .001 percent of the Pentagon budget. Pentagon auditors found the Pentagon cannot account for 25 percent of their $700 billion annual budget and President Obama has announced plans to spend $7 billion of our tax dollars to build power plants in Africa.

For the latest video from the ASBL, click here.

###